Sequence of Days : Another Grandpa Question












10














"Take any day. Next is the day 2 days before that. And next is the day 2 days before that and so on" Says Grandpa



"That is your sequence? What is that related to?" I ask



"You tell me. Use your imagination. Think out of box. Take a leap of faith. I will give you a hint. Pope." Said Grandpa.




Hmm. I started thinking. Monday-Saturday-Thursday-Tuesday-Sunday-Friday-Wednesday-Monday again and so on. Pope??




What is it that relates to those days in that order?










share|improve this question





























    10














    "Take any day. Next is the day 2 days before that. And next is the day 2 days before that and so on" Says Grandpa



    "That is your sequence? What is that related to?" I ask



    "You tell me. Use your imagination. Think out of box. Take a leap of faith. I will give you a hint. Pope." Said Grandpa.




    Hmm. I started thinking. Monday-Saturday-Thursday-Tuesday-Sunday-Friday-Wednesday-Monday again and so on. Pope??




    What is it that relates to those days in that order?










    share|improve this question



























      10












      10








      10


      0





      "Take any day. Next is the day 2 days before that. And next is the day 2 days before that and so on" Says Grandpa



      "That is your sequence? What is that related to?" I ask



      "You tell me. Use your imagination. Think out of box. Take a leap of faith. I will give you a hint. Pope." Said Grandpa.




      Hmm. I started thinking. Monday-Saturday-Thursday-Tuesday-Sunday-Friday-Wednesday-Monday again and so on. Pope??




      What is it that relates to those days in that order?










      share|improve this question















      "Take any day. Next is the day 2 days before that. And next is the day 2 days before that and so on" Says Grandpa



      "That is your sequence? What is that related to?" I ask



      "You tell me. Use your imagination. Think out of box. Take a leap of faith. I will give you a hint. Pope." Said Grandpa.




      Hmm. I started thinking. Monday-Saturday-Thursday-Tuesday-Sunday-Friday-Wednesday-Monday again and so on. Pope??




      What is it that relates to those days in that order?







      pattern knowledge






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 4 at 3:02







      DEEM

















      asked Jan 4 at 2:47









      DEEMDEEM

      5,3571698




      5,3571698






















          1 Answer
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          active

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          10














          Is it:




          The day of the week on which the 29th of February falls?




          Reason:




          Our calendar is the Gregorian Calendar, named for Pope Gregory. Hence, also, leap of faith. Of course, this will fail every 100 years or so, since it's not a leap year when the year is divisible by 100. Of course, the exception to this occurs every 400 years, so 2000 was a leap year because it was the exception to the exception. But your grandfather was likely born after 1900 so maybe he wasn't too worried about that...







          share|improve this answer

















          • 2




            I kinda hope not, because what's being ignored here is actually that pope's contribution, and the sequence without that dates back to 45BC.
            – Gareth McCaughan
            Jan 4 at 11:52










          • @GarethMcCaughan - they way the answer is written, yes. But in the OP, grandpa merely gave 'pope' as a hint. It could be he meant that the pope broke it.
            – deep thought
            2 days ago











          Your Answer





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          1 Answer
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          active

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          10














          Is it:




          The day of the week on which the 29th of February falls?




          Reason:




          Our calendar is the Gregorian Calendar, named for Pope Gregory. Hence, also, leap of faith. Of course, this will fail every 100 years or so, since it's not a leap year when the year is divisible by 100. Of course, the exception to this occurs every 400 years, so 2000 was a leap year because it was the exception to the exception. But your grandfather was likely born after 1900 so maybe he wasn't too worried about that...







          share|improve this answer

















          • 2




            I kinda hope not, because what's being ignored here is actually that pope's contribution, and the sequence without that dates back to 45BC.
            – Gareth McCaughan
            Jan 4 at 11:52










          • @GarethMcCaughan - they way the answer is written, yes. But in the OP, grandpa merely gave 'pope' as a hint. It could be he meant that the pope broke it.
            – deep thought
            2 days ago
















          10














          Is it:




          The day of the week on which the 29th of February falls?




          Reason:




          Our calendar is the Gregorian Calendar, named for Pope Gregory. Hence, also, leap of faith. Of course, this will fail every 100 years or so, since it's not a leap year when the year is divisible by 100. Of course, the exception to this occurs every 400 years, so 2000 was a leap year because it was the exception to the exception. But your grandfather was likely born after 1900 so maybe he wasn't too worried about that...







          share|improve this answer

















          • 2




            I kinda hope not, because what's being ignored here is actually that pope's contribution, and the sequence without that dates back to 45BC.
            – Gareth McCaughan
            Jan 4 at 11:52










          • @GarethMcCaughan - they way the answer is written, yes. But in the OP, grandpa merely gave 'pope' as a hint. It could be he meant that the pope broke it.
            – deep thought
            2 days ago














          10












          10








          10






          Is it:




          The day of the week on which the 29th of February falls?




          Reason:




          Our calendar is the Gregorian Calendar, named for Pope Gregory. Hence, also, leap of faith. Of course, this will fail every 100 years or so, since it's not a leap year when the year is divisible by 100. Of course, the exception to this occurs every 400 years, so 2000 was a leap year because it was the exception to the exception. But your grandfather was likely born after 1900 so maybe he wasn't too worried about that...







          share|improve this answer












          Is it:




          The day of the week on which the 29th of February falls?




          Reason:




          Our calendar is the Gregorian Calendar, named for Pope Gregory. Hence, also, leap of faith. Of course, this will fail every 100 years or so, since it's not a leap year when the year is divisible by 100. Of course, the exception to this occurs every 400 years, so 2000 was a leap year because it was the exception to the exception. But your grandfather was likely born after 1900 so maybe he wasn't too worried about that...








          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jan 4 at 4:22









          Dr XorileDr Xorile

          11.6k12466




          11.6k12466








          • 2




            I kinda hope not, because what's being ignored here is actually that pope's contribution, and the sequence without that dates back to 45BC.
            – Gareth McCaughan
            Jan 4 at 11:52










          • @GarethMcCaughan - they way the answer is written, yes. But in the OP, grandpa merely gave 'pope' as a hint. It could be he meant that the pope broke it.
            – deep thought
            2 days ago














          • 2




            I kinda hope not, because what's being ignored here is actually that pope's contribution, and the sequence without that dates back to 45BC.
            – Gareth McCaughan
            Jan 4 at 11:52










          • @GarethMcCaughan - they way the answer is written, yes. But in the OP, grandpa merely gave 'pope' as a hint. It could be he meant that the pope broke it.
            – deep thought
            2 days ago








          2




          2




          I kinda hope not, because what's being ignored here is actually that pope's contribution, and the sequence without that dates back to 45BC.
          – Gareth McCaughan
          Jan 4 at 11:52




          I kinda hope not, because what's being ignored here is actually that pope's contribution, and the sequence without that dates back to 45BC.
          – Gareth McCaughan
          Jan 4 at 11:52












          @GarethMcCaughan - they way the answer is written, yes. But in the OP, grandpa merely gave 'pope' as a hint. It could be he meant that the pope broke it.
          – deep thought
          2 days ago




          @GarethMcCaughan - they way the answer is written, yes. But in the OP, grandpa merely gave 'pope' as a hint. It could be he meant that the pope broke it.
          – deep thought
          2 days ago


















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